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Pyth

@Ag_Blake

Ontario Katılım Eylül 2013
310 Takip Edilen74 Takipçiler
Rob
Rob@hillingdon531·
@AMK_Mapping_ Why has Russia not hit these plants earlier??
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AMK Mapping 🇳🇿
AMK Mapping 🇳🇿@AMK_Mapping_·
NASA FIRMS data shows that large fires are burning at the Artem Defence Plant in Kyiv following overnight Russian ballistic and cruise missile strikes. The Artem plant is known to produce air-to-air missiles, automated air-guided missile training and maintenance systems, anti-tank guided missiles, and aircraft equipment. Coordinates: 50.462189, 30.483655
AMK Mapping 🇳🇿 tweet media
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@fading_futures @cmalex79 @can A common myth. Contemporary and historical China are full of useful firsts. I think in the next 100 years we will still a lot of medical firsts from China, while they still mostly copy and play catch up in weapons and metallurgy, mostly reflecting the social values of PRC vs USA
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Chris "Brutal American" A.
@can Gee, our loss, I guess. We'll just have to persevere without low IQ Indians and Chinese spies somehow.
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Elle 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Elle 🇨🇦🇺🇸@AngryWhiteAsian·
@USAmbCanada Well, that’s it then. President Trump is going to have to do for Canada what he did for the Venezuelan, Iranian and (soon) Cuban people.
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Ambassador Pete Hoekstra
Ambassador Pete Hoekstra@USAmbCanada·
CRTC’s decision to triple the tax rate on leading streaming services is making a bad situation worse. CRTC is targeting and taxing U.S. companies, putting up new, discriminatory trade barriers, and worsening the investment climate for American businesses.
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Cpl Insano
Cpl Insano@Cpl_Insano·
@CTVNews Maybe we should of kept the 25 plus billion the liberals gave the Ukraine...
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Stephen Crawford
Stephen Crawford@stcrawford2·
Now more than ever, it is critical that we are protecting our province’s data and safeguarding our security against bad actors. Banning government use and future purchases of Chinese-made drones is another important step in our plan to protect Ontario and better leverage Canada’s world-class drone manufacturing sector. More here: news.ontario.ca/en/release/100…
Stephen Crawford tweet media
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@RealDaveMcCabe @FT But you won't decouple. You're already selling your strategic reserves to the highest bidder. The industry is too globalized to decouple, and the pil barons won't allow it, it makes them more money tha just selling in America.
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David McCabe 🇺🇸
David McCabe 🇺🇸@RealDaveMcCabe·
@FT No it's not. America could decouple from the global oil market and they would be better off. Maybe crack a book
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Ali
Ali@MerruX·
@Osinttechnical it was not a real launcher Unit because it had no hydraulics , a real PSU or comms antenna
Ali tweet mediaAli tweet media
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OSINTtechnical
OSINTtechnical@Osinttechnical·
Yesterday, Hezbollah forces attacked the Israeli Iron Dome launch site at Jall el Aalam, with an FPV drone successfully hitting a loaded missile firing unit.
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JimmyDWC
JimmyDWC@JimmyDWC·
@DrJStrategy Except the Canadian government has been compromised by the CCP and this is what they want. It’s either annexation by the USA or have the CCP sitting at the doorstep
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James E. Thorne
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy·
For the record. No More Free Ride for Canada The pause of the Permanent Joint Board on Defence is not just a bureaucratic squabble; it is Washington’s opening move in a larger strategic game is to force Canada out of its free‑rider equilibrium. For 86 years, the board has been the institutional expression of Canada’s privileged status under the American security umbrella, a quiet assurance that Ottawa would always have a seat at the table when North America’s defence was planned. Putting it on ice is how the United States turns that privilege into leverage. The strategic game is simple. The United States wants Canada to undergo a structural adjustment that Canadian politics has spent decades avoiding: higher, sustained defence spending; faster delivery of real capabilities; and a serious industrial base anchored in energy and critical minerals. By pausing the PJBD rather than gutting NORAD or daily operational cooperation, Washington creates a reversible but highly visible penalty. The message is: the shield stays, for now, but the status, influence, and symbolism that Canadian elites prize are conditional on Ottawa finally behaving like a hard power rather than a moralizing stakeholder. Mark Carney has, belatedly, read this room. He knows a world of Iranian missile swarms, Russian attrition wars, and Chinese naval expansion will not indulge a G7 country that treats 2 percent of GDP on defence as heroic while treating its vast resource endowment as something to be constrained rather than exploited. The problem is that most of Canada’s political class, and the majority of its public, have not caught up. They still act as if the post WWII rules based era lives coupled with geography, good intentions, and ESG‑branded virtue restraint on resource development are a strategy that is sustainable. In that context, the PJBD pause is best understood as a forcing mechanism. It is designed to make clear that Canada must choose: either adapt, by rapidly ramping up defence spending, rapidly developing and processing its natural resources as strategic assets, and embedding itself more deeply in U.S. planning and production, or accept a future as a protected but marginal player, lecturing from the sidelines while others set the terms. The strategic game is to end Canada’s era of cost‑free virtue and make hard power, not slogans, the price of continued privilege. No one should be surprised.
The Washington Times@WashTimes

A pause in U.S. participation is unprecedented in the board’s history and signals a rupture in U.S.-Canada relations. buff.ly/vlwUC2s

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Bryan Breguet
Bryan Breguet@Prominent_Bryan·
@Captain_C2 And you're representative of the average Canadian and that's why we have no economic growth
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Bryan Breguet
Bryan Breguet@Prominent_Bryan·
I will never understand why Canadians insist e-transfer is better It isn't. It's always more annoying to use than the US system (or what they have in the rest of the world) I'm not saying interac e-transfer is terrible or unusable but it is objectively less convenient than Venmo, especially if you don't already have this person in your contacts It's weird how defensive Canadians are on this. Weird elbows up stuff. But it's always from people who have never experienced the system in the rest of the world
corey dale@ripcordca

@TateHackert Etransfer is horrible compared to the US apps

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The Wary Lemming
The Wary Lemming@thewarylemming·
@RMC19861987 @valdombre How do you know what I would and wouldn't know? You don't. Just like I don't know if you're an RCAF vet. But if you are, why would you want to be beholden to a country that threatens to annex us? Or withhold vital parts?? What country did you swear an oath to protect?
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Riley Donovan
Riley Donovan@valdombre·
No more defence co-operation. So, I guess they won't mind if we don't buy their F-35 jets then?
Riley Donovan tweet media
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@Just_Ang3lo I should have also watched CCA again...
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JovianMoon
JovianMoon@Just_Ang3lo·
Good morning! I rewatched Hathaway’s flash last night in preparation to see The Sorcery of Nymph Circe later today! I’m so excited!!
GIF
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@BickleKun @0megaKatana There was about 12 or so people there when I saw it today. About 5 when I saw the Wing anniversary / IBO feature a few months ago. Mostly glad I live somewhere I can see it.
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Bickle bork
Bickle bork@BickleKun·
@0megaKatana it means they sold about 10 tickets per theater Compared to other fathom events, it's not good. But is it good compared to other non-Ghibli releases? Possibly.
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@RyanMMcNeil @CTVAtlantic Yeah, the 350,000 rural people there are going to spend 100+ a month on starlink lol fiber stays good for 30 years a starlink satellite lasts like 5 and has worse data rates.
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Ryan McNeil
Ryan McNeil@RyanMMcNeil·
@CTVAtlantic A huge percentage of these rural connectivity problems were already solved by Starlink. But government will still spend another $73 million “solving” a problem for which a private sector solution already exists.
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@scotiangunownr @supriyadwivedi What Republicans are doing in the USA with NSPM-7 is 1000x worse. They have ended speech and spending the government doesnt agree with. Canadian conservatives would likley do simmilar, as all their plans are juat feed to them by American billionaires.
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Cyrus 🇻🇦🇨🇦🇺🇸
Cyrus 🇻🇦🇨🇦🇺🇸@scotiangunownr·
@supriyadwivedi Just the same old authoritarian stuff. Freezing bank accounts, massive state surveillance and censorship of the internet, confiscating guns. Totally on brand for the liberal party of Canada.
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Supriya Dwivedi
Supriya Dwivedi@supriyadwivedi·
here’s my latest on bill c-22 (lawful access act): “The Carney government is about to take a massive step towards violating the privacy rights of every single Canadian.” nationalobserver.com/2026/05/14/opi…
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@CStiles83 @jonnywakefield @JeremyAppel1025 Duty to consult is a Section 35 rights, its not part of the Bill of Ruggts, and cannot be bypassed with a NWC. First Nations and Inuit rights cannot be bypassed with a NWC.
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@jonnywakefield The constitutional threshold for the DTC is super low, it basically means they just have to inform them its happening in one on one meetings. At least thats what Ontario gets away with for the Nations I do work for here.
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Bluewolf194
Bluewolf194@bluewolf1941·
@_deimos_art Sorry to do this to you but you put the PIP boy on the wrong arm
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Pyth
Pyth@Ag_Blake·
@1800ghostman You're supposed to dip it in the "apple" juice.
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Stats Globe
Stats Globe@statsglobe·
Percentage of white population in Toronto: 🇨🇦 1980 ⟶ 86.5% 🇨🇦 1981 ⟶ 85.8% 🇨🇦 1982 ⟶ 84.9% 🇨🇦 1983 ⟶ 84.0% 🇨🇦 1984 ⟶ 83.1% 🇨🇦 1985 ⟶ 82.5% 🇨🇦 1986 ⟶ 82.0% 🇨🇦 1987 ⟶ 80.7% 🇨🇦 1988 ⟶ 79.4% 🇨🇦 1989 ⟶ 78.1% 🇨🇦 1990 ⟶ 76.8% 🇨🇦 1991 ⟶ 73.5% 🇨🇦 1992 ⟶ 72.2% 🇨🇦 1993 ⟶ 71.0% 🇨🇦 1994 ⟶ 69.8% 🇨🇦 1995 ⟶ 68.7% 🇨🇦 1996 ⟶ 67.7% 🇨🇦 1997 ⟶ 66.6% 🇨🇦 1998 ⟶ 65.5% 🇨🇦 1999 ⟶ 64.4% 🇨🇦 2000 ⟶ 63.4% 🇨🇦 2001 ⟶ 62.4% 🇨🇦 2002 ⟶ 61.4% 🇨🇦 2003 ⟶ 60.4% 🇨🇦 2004 ⟶ 59.4% 🇨🇦 2005 ⟶ 58.5% 🇨🇦 2006 ⟶ 56.6% 🇨🇦 2007 ⟶ 55.7% 🇨🇦 2008 ⟶ 54.8% 🇨🇦 2009 ⟶ 53.9% 🇨🇦 2010 ⟶ 53.1% 🇨🇦 2011 ⟶ 52.3% 🇨🇦 2012 ⟶ 51.4% 🇨🇦 2013 ⟶ 50.6% 🇨🇦 2014 ⟶ 49.8% 🇨🇦 2015 ⟶ 49.0% 🇨🇦 2016 ⟶ 47.8% 🇨🇦 2017 ⟶ 46.8% 🇨🇦 2018 ⟶ 45.8% 🇨🇦 2019 ⟶ 44.9% 🇨🇦 2020 ⟶ 44.0% 🇨🇦 2021 ⟶ 42.3% 🇨🇦 2022 ⟶ 41.6% 🇨🇦 2023 ⟶ 40.9% 🇨🇦 2024 ⟶ 40.2% 🇨🇦 2025 ⟶ 39.5%
Stats Globe tweet mediaStats Globe tweet media
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